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Providing Safe Food PowerPoint Presentation
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Providing Safe Food

Providing Safe Food

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Providing Safe Food

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  1. Providing Safe Food • Objectives: • Recognize the importance of food safety • Understand how food becomes unsafe • Identify TCS food • Recognize the risk factors for foodborne illness • Understand important prevention measures for keeping food safe 1-2

  2. Challenges to Food Safety • A foodborne illness is a disease transmitted to people through food. • An illness is considered an outbreak when: • Two or more people have the same symptoms after eating the same food • An investigation is conducted by state and local regulatory authorities • The outbreak is confirmed by laboratory analysis 1-3

  3. Challenges to Food Safety • Challenges include: • Time and money • Language and culture • Literacy and education • Pathogens • Unapproved suppliers • High-risk customers • Staff turnover 1-4

  4. Costs of Foodborne Illness • Costs of a foodborne illness to an operation: • Loss of customers and sales • Loss of reputation • Negative media exposure • Lowered staff morale 1-5

  5. Costs of Foodborne Illness • Costs of a foodborne illness to an operation: • Staff missing work • Lawsuits and legal fees • Increased insurance premiums • Staff retraining 1-6

  6. How Foodborne Illnesses Occur Unsafe food is the result of contamination: • Biological • Chemical • Physical 1-7

  7. Contaminants • Biological contaminants: • Bacteria • Viruses • Parasites • Fungi 1-8

  8. Contaminants • Chemical contaminants: • Cleaners • Sanitizers • Polishes 1-9

  9. Contaminants • Physical hazards: • Metal shavings • Staples • Bandages • Glass • Dirt • Natural objects (e.g., fish bones in a fillet) 1-10

  10. How Food Becomes Unsafe • Five risk factors for foodborne illness: • Purchasing food from unsafe sources • Failing to cook food correctly • Holding food at incorrect temperatures • Using contaminated equipment • Practicing poor personal hygiene 1-11

  11. How Food Becomes Unsafe Time-temperature abuse Cross-contamination Poor personal hygiene Poor cleaning and sanitizing 1-12

  12. How Food Becomes Unsafe Time-temperature abuse: • When food has stayed too long at temperatures good for pathogen growth 1-13

  13. How Food Becomes Unsafe Food has been time-temperature abused when: • It has not been held or stored at correct temperatures • It is not cooked or reheated enough to kill pathogens • It is not cooled correctly Pg 1.5 SSF 6e Pg 1.5 SSF 6e Pg 1.5 SSF 6e 1-14

  14. How Food Becomes Unsafe Cross-contamination: • When pathogens are transferred from one surface or food to another Pg 1.5 SSF 6e 1-15

  15. How Food Becomes Unsafe Cross-contamination can cause a foodborne illness when: • Contaminated ingredients are added to food that receives no further cooking • Ready-to-eat food touches contaminated surfaces • A food handler touches contaminated food and then touches ready-to-eat food • Contaminated cleaning cloths touch food-contact surfaces Pg 1.5 SSF 6e 1-16

  16. How Food Becomes Unsafe Poor personal hygiene can cause a foodborne illness when food handlers: • Fail to wash their hands correctly after using the restroom • Cough or sneeze on food • Touch or scratch wounds and then touch food • Work while sick Pg 1.5 SSF 6e 1-17

  17. How Food Becomes Unsafe Poor cleaning and sanitizing: • Equipment and utensils are not washed, rinsed, and sanitized between uses • Food contact surfaces are wiped clean instead of being washed rinsed, and sanitized • Wiping cloths are not stored in a sanitizer solution between uses • Sanitizer solution was not prepared correctly Pg 1.5 SSF 6e 1-18

  18. Food Most Likely to Become Unsafe • TCS food: 1-19

  19. Food Most Likely to Become Unsafe • TCS food: 1-20

  20. Ready-to-Eat Food Ready-to-eat food is food that can be eaten without further: • Preparation • Washing • Cooking Ready-to-eat food includes: • Cooked food • Washed fruit and vegetables • Deli meat • Bakery items • Sugar, spices, and seasonings 1-21

  21. Populations at High Risk for Foodborne Illnesses These people have a higher risk of getting a foodborne illness: • Elderly people • Preschool-age children • People with compromised immune systems 1-22

  22. Keeping Food Safe Focus on these measures: • Controlling time and temperature • Preventing cross-contamination • Practicing personal hygiene • Purchasing from approved, reputable suppliers • Cleaning and sanitizing 1-23

  23. Keeping Food Safe Training and monitoring: • Train staff to follow food safety procedures • Provide initial and ongoing training • Provide all staff with general food safety knowledge • Provide job specific food safety training • Retrain staff regularly • Monitor staff to make sure they are following procedures • Document training 1-24

  24. Keeping Food Safe Government agencies: • The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) • U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) • U.S. Public Health Service (PHS) • State and local regulatory authorities 1-25

  25. You Can Prevent Contamination • Objectives: • Biological, chemical, and physical contaminants and how to prevent them • How to prevent the deliberate contamination of food • How to respond to a foodborne-illness outbreak • Common food allergens and how to prevent reactions to them 2-2

  26. How Contamination Happens • Contaminants come from a variety of places: • Animals we use for food • Air, contaminated water, and dirt • People • Deliberately • Accidentally 2-3

  27. How Contamination Happens • People can contaminate food when: • They don’t wash their hands after using the restroom • They are in contact with a person who is sick • They sneeze or vomit onto food or food contact surfaces • They touch dirty food-contact surfaces and equipment and then touch food 2-4

  28. Biological Contamination Microorganism: • Small, living organism that can be seen only with a microscope • Pathogen: • Harmful microorganism • Make people sick when eaten or produce toxins that cause illness Toxin: • Poison 2-5

  29. Biological Contamination Four types of pathogens can contaminate food and cause foodborne illness: Bacteria Viruses Parasites Fungi 2-6

  30. Biological Contamination Common symptoms of foodborne illness: • Diarrhea • Vomiting • Fever • Nausea • Abdominal cramps • Jaundice (yellowing of skin and eyes) Onset times: • Depend on the type of foodborne illness • Can range from 30 minutes to six weeks 2-7

  31. The “Big Six” Pathogens Food handlers diagnosed with illnesses from the “Big Six” pathogens cannot work in a foodservice operation while they are sick. • Shigella spp. • Salmonella Typhi • Nontyphoidal Salmonella (NTS) • Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC), also known as E. coli • Hepatitis A • Norovirus 2-8

  32. Bacteria: Basic Characteristics • Location: • Found almost everywhere • Detection: • Cannot be seen, smelled, or tasted • Growth: • Will grow rapidly if FAT TOM conditions are correct • Prevention: • Control time and temperature 2-9

  33. What Bacteria Need to Grow F Food A Acidity T Temperature T Time O Oxygen M Moisture 2-10

  34. What Bacteria Need to Grow • Food: • Most bacteria need nutrients to survive • TCS food supports the growth of bacteria better than other types of food F Food 2-11

  35. What Bacteria Need to Grow • Acidity: • Bacteria grow best in food that contains little or no acid A Acidity 2-12

  36. What Bacteria Need to Grow • Temperature: • Bacteria grow rapidly between 41˚F and 135˚F (5˚C and 57˚C) • This range is known as thetemperature danger zone • Bacteria growth is limited when food is held above or below the temperature danger zone T Temperature 2-13

  37. What Bacteria Need to Grow Time: • Bacteria need time to grow • The more time bacteria spend in the temperature danger zone, the greater chance they have to grow to unsafe levels. T Time 2-14

  38. What Bacteria Need to Grow • Oxygen: • Some bacteria need oxygen to grow, while others grow when oxygen isn’t there O Oxygen 2-15

  39. What Bacteria Need to Grow • Moisture: • Bacteria grow well in food with high levels of moisture • aw = water activity; the amount of moisture available in food for bacterial growth • aw scale ranges from 0.0 to 1.0 • Water has a water activity of 1.0 M Moisture 2-16

  40. Control FAT TOM • The conditions you can control: • Temperature • Keep TCS food out of the temperature danger zone • Time • Limit how long TCS food spends in the temperature danger zone 2-17

  41. Major Bacteria That Cause Foodborne Illness • The FDA has identified four types of bacteria that cause severe illness and are highly contagious: • Salmonella Typhi • Nontyphoidal Salmonella • Shigella spp. • Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli 2-18

  42. Major Bacteria That Cause Foodborne Illness Bacteria: SalmonellaTyphi (SAL-me-NEL-uh TI-fee) Source: People 2-19

  43. Major Bacteria That Cause Foodborne Illness Bacteria: Nontyphoidal Salmonella (SAL-me-NEL-uh) Source: Farm animals, People 2-20

  44. Major Bacteria That Cause Foodborne Illness Bacteria: Shigellaspp. (shi-GEL-uh) Source: Human feces 2-21

  45. Major Bacteria That Cause Foodborne Illness Bacteria: Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli(ess-chur-EE-kee-UH-KO-LI), also known as E. coli Source: Intestines of cattle; infected people 2-22

  46. Viruses: Basic Characteristics • Location: • Carried by human beings and animals • Require a living host to grow • Do not grow in food • Can be transferred through food and remain infectious in food • Sources: • Food, water, or any contaminated surface • Typically occur through fecal-oral routes 2-23

  47. Viruses: Basic Characteristics • Destruction: • Not destroyed by normal cooking temperatures • Good personal hygiene must be practiced when handling food and food-contact surfaces • Quick removal and cleanup of vomit is important 2-24

  48. Major Viruses that Cause Foodborne Illnesses The FDA has identified two viruses that are highly contagious and can cause severe illness: • Hepatitis A • Norovirus Food handlers diagnosed with an illness from hepatitis A or Norovirus must not work in an operation while they are sick. 2-25